The Leicestershire & Rutland Cookbook *Sample*

Page 1

The

LEICESTERSHIRE & RUTLAND Cook Book A celebration of the amazing food & drink on our doorstep.


FOREWORD When we started to trade at Hambleton Hall in 1980 our region had limited credentials as a destination for foodies. Representation for Leicestershire and Rutland in the independent guide books (Egon Ronay, Michelin, Good Food Guide) was minimal.

One catalyst for change has been the huge increase in visitor numbers. The construction of Rutland Water in 1976 created

dramatic scenery, water sports, walking and cycling possibilities and the gradual evolution of an exceptional habitat for bird life. But visitors need nourishment and our network of pubs and restaurants has evolved to meet the need. Back in 1980 I was always anxious that a restaurant such as our own, aiming at the very top of the market, was insecurely based if the region did not also have a strong offering in the mid-market. After all, our new clients acquire the habit of eating out in

mid-market restaurants before investing in the best, and the training of chefs and waiters must be shared amongst many good places.

At the time of writing this, at least five of the best gastropubs within 15 minutes of Hambleton Hall are headed by exHambleton chefs or front of house staff and I am proud that we have had a lasting impact on this arena.

Great restaurants need great ingredients. Happily we are seeing more and more small producers growing vegetables, making

cheese or charcuterie or raising animals for the table. At Hambleton Bakery we have had an impact in the provision of artisan bread, cakes and savouries and we have a steady flow of visitors from outside the region for whom a bakery visit cements the region’s reputation for good food.

I still sometimes envy our continental neighbours for their food traditions and great ingredients, but for game, beef, lamb, cheese and of course pork pies, we are unbeatable!

Tim Hart 2 | The Leicestershire and Rutland Cook Book



CONTENTS Editorial

Credits & acknowledgements Foreword by Tim Hart

My food memories by author Tim Burke The directory

2 4

10

186

Guest recipes

Matthew O’Callaghan

The pie minister

Melton empanadas

Bradgate Park

Respect is everything

36

Venison casserole

42

Practice makes perfect

44

Cocoa Amore

104 106

Keeper’s pie with red wine, rosemary and garlic 40

Smoked mackerel ganache with cocoa, treacle and porter bread

The Deli at 58

Listening to their customers

Colston Bassett and spring onion scones

Chef recipes

Delilah Fine Foods

14

16

Dickinson & Morris

45 West

The place to be gin Rosemary rickey Red snapper

The Beautiful Pubs Collective

16

46 48 50

You can bank on Delilahs

52

French toast

56

Swiss cheese fondue served with crudités

The proof is in the pie

58

You’re beautiful

18

Duck rillette

22

From field to fork

62

24

Milly’s winter salad

66

26

Pub scotch eggs

The Berkeley Arms

The perfect country pub

Braised shoulder of venison with caramelised walnuts and poached pear

The Bewicke Arms & The Hare Pie Café

Style and substance

Hummingbird cake

Herb crusted haunch of venison, pressing of root vegetables

20

Pork pie

54

Farndon Fields

Dauphinoise potatoes

Fox and Hounds

The hunt for great food

64

68

28

30

Chilled to perfection

72

Hart and soul

74

32

Monkfish with Madras, vermouth and Granny Smith velouté

60

Gelato Village

Hambleton Hall

Foccacia bread

70

76


James’ Café Bistro

A home from home at James’

78

Lemon torte with strawberry and honey sorbet 80

John’s House

Kayal

Bradgate Park fallow deer, smoked beetroot, quince and chocolate

82

Where tradition meets quality

84

Rama dosa

88

Bijochayan’s chemmeen kootu

Leicester Market

86

Life at the market

92

Great little Britain

96

Little Britain Pub Company

Rare roast Chateaubriand

Marquess of Exeter

98

Rutland Charcuterie Co.

Riding the crest of a wave

Roasted vegetable and charcuterie board

Sloeberry Spirits

140 142

Sloe-ly spirited

144

Strawberry surprise

146

Mulled sloe gin

St Martin’s Tea & Coffee

Crafty coffee

Bobby’s ox cheek rendang with roasted pineapple & cucumber salad Farmyard jam burger

Walkers Pies

The lord of the pies

Chicken, bacon & red wine with baked suet crust

Walter Smith

146

148 150 152 154 156

Pan fried fillet of red snapper with roasted red pepper, spring onion & ginger salsa

102

The real farmer’s market

108

The perfect village pub

112

Brewing in Leicestershire

Duo of Bradgate venison

116

Experience counts

166

Fifth generation brewers

168

Melton Mowbray Market Odd John & Family

Pork pie

Simon’s little tart

The Old Bull’s Head

Classic dishes with a twist

Venison steak with fondant potato and chocolate jus

King prawn, chorizo & crab linguine

Paddy’s Marten Inn

114 116 118 120 122

My family’s secret recipes

124

Amita’s jinga masti

128

Amita’s slow-cooked lamb on the bone

Queen of Bradgate

All hail the Queen Shin of beef chilli

The Royal Oak

Destination dining

Apple wood smoked chicken bourguignon

126

130 132 134 136

Award-winning butchers

158

How to select and cook the perfect steak

162

Chicken chasseur

Charnwood Brewery Everards Brewery

Slow-braised pork belly in Tiger bitter

The Langton Brewery

Word of mouth

160

170 172

Wine recommendations

Duncan Murray Wines

Highly recommended

Wine recommendations

176

178


You can bank

ON DELILAH’S One of the UK’s great delis is now in Leicester too.

Sangita Tryner speaks with a rare passion; not least because

Delilah’s kitchen team assemble food ranging from cake

the goods that pack her extraordinary deli, Delilah. It’s an

cheeses, meats, breads, pickles, preserves and more in the store.

she’s trying to get across the dedication of the producers of Aladdin’s cave of the very finest foods.

“I listen to producers talking about their products, and the

and coffee to full meals, using the cornucopia of top quality A typical dish might be heritage and pickled beetroot with toasted walnuts, ash-coated goat’s cheese and local honey.

passion is there to taste in every mouthful,” says Sangita.

Dishes can be complemented by a choice from the 200 fine

experience. That’s why we want people to get up close and

mostly from small, owner-producers, and focusing heavily on

“Our job is to make sure that our customers get to share that

personal to the food – we don’t hide our cheese behind glass, we want you to get so close you can almost taste it.”

Many Leicestershire folk know Delilah from visits to

wines on sale, sourced by Sangita’s wine buyer-husband dynamic up-and-coming regions. Any of the wines can be

‘drunk in’ for a small corkage charge, and there is a constantly changing range available by the glass.

Nottingham, so the news that they were to open a branch in

“We’re huge fans of East Midlands produce, as well the best of

around the foodie community. The Leicester shop, located in

legendary Villandry in its hey-day as her inspiration. “There’s

the heart of Leicester in late Spring 2016 sent a huge buzz the old Allied Irish Bank in St Martin’s, has all the things that makes the multi-award winning Nottingham store so beloved.

The building is stunning, a faithfully restored Victorian neo-

British and international,” adds Sangita, who cites London’s a story to tell behind everything we sell, but the proof of the

pudding is in the eating, and we encourage sampling and tasting. We really want you to try the products that we love that’s what Delilah is all about.

Gothic banking hall, with a wealth of original features: a

“Bringing this lovely building back to life is so satisfying,”

area, while the ground floor houses the extensive deli and the

Leicester is just so exciting right now!”

double-height ceiling provides space for a mezzanine dining popular seated bar area.

6 | The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book

she concludes. “and I’ve never seen a city change so fast –


Delilah Fine Foods



Delilah's

FRENCH TOAST The important thing here is the quality of the bread – real artisan bread absorbs the egg without turning to mush – using the right pancetta to get a crispy, salty, smokey kick; and using a good maple syrup, not a “maple-flavoured” alternative. Serves 1.

Ingredients

Method

4 slices of Hambleton Bakery French Baguette, cut at an angle to get a larger surface area

Preheat your grill.

4 or 5 thinly sliced rashers of pancetta stesa (lightly smoked)

Whisk the egg in a mixing bowl and then dip the 4 slices of baguette in the whisked egg mixture until the bread is completely coated and has absorbed most of the egg.

30g unsalted butter

Add the eggy bread slices into the now hot frying pan and cook the bread on both sides until golden brown.

1 free range egg

30ml good quality maple syrup Splash olive oil

Place a frying pan on a medium heat with the knob of butter and a splash of olive oil (so the butter doesn’t burn).

While the French toast is cooking in the frying pan, line up the pancetta slices on a baking tray and place under the grill. Cook until crisp and brittle. Place the French toast onto a plate, arrange the pancetta over the top and finally drizzle the maple syrup over.

The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book | 9



45 West's

ROSEMARY RICKEY A refreshing herbal twist on a simple classic.

Ingredients

Method

50ml Burleighs Distiller’s Cut

Woody herbs are often overlooked in desserts and drinks, but they are far too flexible to be confined to the roasting tray. In this drink the rosemary – traditionally partnered with lemon but excellent with lime – provides a backbone to support the delicate, sour components and adds another dimension to the classic rickey.

20ml rosemary syrup (see below) 15ml fresh lime juice

Fever Tree soda water 1 lime, for garnish

For the rosemary syrup

A large handful rosemary leaves 300g white sugar

150ml boiling water

To make rosemary syrup, pick fresh a large handful of rosemary leaves. In a blender or food processor, blitz the rosemary leaves with the sugar until the oils turn the sugar green. Pour over the boiling water, stir to dissolve the sugar and strain into a bottle. Allow to cool and store in the fridge. To prepare the drink, combine the gin, syrup and lime juice in a tall glass. Add ice to the top, top up with soda and stir. Garnish with a sprig of fresh rosemary and a lime wheel.

45 West's RED SNAPPER

A delicious spicy Bloody Mary inspired by Leicester’s Golden Mile.

Ingredients

Method

40ml Burleighs Export Strength

In the 1940s the difference between a Bloody Mary and a Red Snapper was largely just in the name. Nowadays, red snapper refers to a Bloody Mary-style drink made with gin instead of vodka. The pepperiness and earthiness of Burleighs Export Strength is a perfect partner to the fiery spice of chilli. Cardamom seed, a principle ingredient of garam masala, is also one of the botanicals used in the distillation of the gin.

15ml fresh lime juice

15-35ml Snapper mix (to taste, see method) 150ml good quality tomato juice 15ml shiraz, to float

For the Snapper mix

150ml Worcestershire sauce 57ml Tabasco

30 turns black pepper

A large pinch of celery salt

2 pinches Maldon smoked sea salt 3 pinches garam masala 30ml honey

To make the snapper mix In a jam jar, combine 150ml Worcestershire sauce, 57ml Tabasco, 30 turns black pepper, a large pinch of celery salt, two pinches Maldon smoked sea salt, three pinches of your favourite garam masala and 30ml honey. Stir thoroughly and shake well before use. To prepare the drink, put all ingredients except the shiraz into a cocktail shaker with ice and gently roll – don’t shake – back and forth until well mixed and chilled. Strain into a tall glass over fresh ice, gently float the shiraz on top over the back of a spoon, and garnish with pickled vegetables, a mini poppadom and mango chutney. The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book | 11



Beautiful Pubs Collective PUB SCOTCH EGGS

An extremely popular favourite, enjoyed by guests in their hundreds at Beautiful Pub’s city centre pub The Rutland and Derby.

Ingredients

Method

6 large free range duck eggs

Bring a pan of water to the boil.

650g seasoned sausage meat (best from your local butcher, we use Owen Taylor’s award-winning special sausage meat) Handful of curly parsley, finely chopped

3 good pinches of fine sea salt and cracked black pepper 50g plain sifted flour

200g panko breadcrumbs

2 large free range hens eggs beaten, for dipping 750ml vegetable or groundnut oil, for deep frying

Lower the duck eggs into the water and simmer for 6 minutes (for runny) 8 minutes (for set). Drain and cool under cold running water for 5 minutes. Gently tap the cooled eggs and peel the shells away and set aside. We recommend refrigerating them for half an hour. Place the sausage meat into a bowl and add the chopped parsley, sea salt and black pepper. Mix together thoroughly and then divide into six equal sizes balls. One at a time flatten each sausage meat ball on a roll of cling film, place the cooked and cooled duck egg into the middle of the meat and wrap around the egg, covering it evenly. Repeat with the rest of the eggs and sausage meat. Roll each duck egg through the sifted flour, the beaten eggs and the panko breadcrumbs to coat, repeat with more egg and the panko breadcrumbs for a really even coating. Heat the oil in a heavy-based saucepan to 150°c. Slowly lower the scotch eggs into the pan (cooking two at time) and fry for 5-6 minutes turning occasionally to colour evenly. Remove with a slotted kitchen spoon and rest on two sheets of kitchen paper. In the pub we serve with Stokes brown sauce but at home you could try curried mayonnaise.

The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book | 13


The proof is in

THE PIE Melton’s longest established pork pie makers are the guardians of a noble tradition.

John Dickinson may not have been the very first pie maker in

During the winter months the agricultural labourers would

still thrives suggests he was one of the best.

this humble fare. It was John Dickinson’s grandma, explains

Melton Mowbray, but the fact that after 165 years his shop

Ye Olde Pork Pie shop in Melton is the site of his original

bakehouse and the pork pie business he built up with Joseph Morris. Today it sells 3,000 pies a week - ten times that figure

work for the hunts, and the hunting folk took a shine to

Stephen, who made them into a more refined version with

pastry to be eaten and jelly to protect the pie while they bumped around in saddlebags.

in the run up to Christmas - with baking still done from 2am,

The fame of these pies spread and the name of Melton

visitors to the town it is a major tourist attraction and a key

Pie Shoppe, Dickinson and Morris has other specialities too

six days a week. With some 30 per cent of customers being part of Melton’s status as England’s Rural Capital of Food.

In these days when the British have started to value provenance in food, the story of how Melton Mowbray

became synonymous with quality pork pies is worth telling, and Stephen Hallam, managing director of Dickinson and Morris is the man to tell it.

“There was a lot of cheese made in the Vale of Belvoir, and the

by-product whey was a good food supplement for pigs,” he

explains. “The surplus of pork that resulted meant it became a standard lunch for the local rural labourers. At that time

though they would crudely wrap a hunk of meat in pastry and put it the fire, throwing away the pastry ‘coffin’.”

14 | The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book

Mowbray would be forever linked. Today at Ye Olde Pork

– from hand-linked sausages and artisan bread baked on site, to Melton Hunt Cake, a rich, moist fruitcake still made to the

recipe developed by Joe Morris for the hunting folk to enjoy with their stirrup cup.

“People increasingly have a real desire to seek out better quality food with heritage,” says Stephen Hallam. “We are

proud so many people make a pilgrimage to find us and learn about the fascinating link between Melton Mowbray, pork pies and stilton cheese – and of course to sample some pie!”


Dickinson & Morris



Fox and Hounds

MONKFISH WITH MADRAS, VERMOUTH AND GRANNY SMITH VELOUTÉ Serves 4.

Ingredients

Method

1 tsp flatleaf parsley, chopped

For the velouté

Zest of 1 lemon

900g monkfish, cut to 4 equal portions (your fishmonger can do this for you) 12 thin slices unsmoked prosciutto 1 tbsp vegetable oil Salt and pepper

For the Madras, Vermouth and Granny Smith velouté: 50g butter

5 shallots, thinly sliced

4 Granny Smith apples peeled, cored and thinly sliced 1 bunch coriander

1 tbsp Madras powder 1 tsp turmeric

250ml Vermouth (Martini Bianco ideally)

Add the butter to a pan with a lid and sweat down the shallots over a medium heat. Make sure they don’t catch on the pan or colour. Add the apple and half the coriander. Mix well and then add the madras and turmeric. Deglaze the pan with the Vermouth. Reduce by half and then add the stock and the cream. Simmer for 15 minutes and then add the rest of the coriander. Remove the pan from the heat and cover with cling film and leave to infuse for 15 minutes. Strain the sauce through a chinois or sieve. Blend the sauce with lime zest and juice. For the fish Mix the parsley and lemon zest. Season the monkfish with salt and pepper and then roll it in the mixture. Lay out two sheets of cling film, overlapping them so they easily cover your fish. Lay out three slices of prosciutto, overlapping them slightly. Place a piece of the seasoned monkfish in the middle and fold the prosciutto over the monkfish to cover it. Tightly roll the cling film around the fish and prosciutto, making sure not to get cling film caught between the fish and the prosciutto. Grabbing the ends of the cling film, keep rolling the package on your work surface until you have a tight parcel. Tie a knot in each end. It sounds more complicated than it is – there are a number of YouTube tutorials if you need help. Repeat a further three times. Chill in the fridge for 1 hour.

500ml double cream

Preheat the oven to 200°c. Heat the oil in a pan and remove the monkfish from the clingfilm. Brown the monkfish parcels on all sides until golden. Transfer to the hot oven for 7-8 minutes to finish cooking. Let it rest for 3-4 minutes.

Salt and pepper

Serve with the velouté and your choice of seasonal vegetables. Bok choi and yellow courgette work wonderfully, as do a handful of steamed mussels.

750ml vegetable stock (the best you can get) 2 limes, zested and juiced

The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book | 17



James' Café Bistro

LEMON TORTE WITH STRAWBERRY AND HONEY SORBET Debbie’s favourite! Something to enjoy in a great British heatwave. Serves 8.

Ingredients

Method

For the pastry

For the pastry

125g salted butter 255g plain flour 30g icing sugar

1 medium free range egg Zest of 1 medium lemon For the filling

Zest of 2 medium lemons

Juice of 3 medium lemons 250g caster sugar

5 medium free range eggs 290ml double cream For the sorbet

500ml puréed strawberries (ripest local ones preferred)

100g honey (locally made preferable) 400ml water

Dice the butter and add to the flour, then rub with fingers until it resembles breadcrumbs. Mix in the icing sugar and lemon zest then add the egg and bring the mixture together to a ball, but don’t overmix. Flatten slightly, wrap in cling film and refrigerate for 20 minutes. Once chilled, roll the pastry between two sheets of cling film to the desired thickness. Remove top layer of film and turn the pastry into a deep-sided, greased, floured, springform tin. Using the remaining layer of cling film push the pastry into the edges of the tin and up the sides – this will avoid it sticking to your fingers. Remove cling film and push pastry gently up the sides with fingers till its 2mm above tin to allow for shrinkage during baking. Refrigerate for 20 minutes. Bake blind using baking parchment and pastry beans for 10 minutes at 190°c or until the edges are slightly golden. Remove the parchment and beans. If there are any cracks appearing fix them now with any spare pastry and by brushing with egg – the lemon mixture is thin and will find these cracks and cause havoc. Bake for a further 10 minutes at 180ºc or until nicely crisp. Cool slightly. For the filling Thoroughly mix the lemon zest in to the caster sugar. In a separate bowl squeeze the lemon juice then crack in the eggs. Mix a little, then add the double cream. Stir through gently, then sieve this mixture on to the zesty sugar. Gently stir until sugar is combined. Now pour this mixture into the pastry case. This is easier if the case is already on a baking tray in the oven – it avoids carrying the liquid filled case and potential spillages. Bake at 160ºc for 30-40 minutes. Cook until there’s a slight wobble in the middle but no raising at the edges and no browning. Cool completely before popping out of the tin. For the sorbet Blend and sieve the fresh strawberries. Stir in honey and then the water. Chill for 30 minutes. Churn in an ice cream machine for 20 minutes or until soft set. If you don’t have an ice cream machine place a bowl in a freezer and beat with a whisk every 15 minutes until smooth and scoopable (this may take a couple of hours). Take a big slice of the lemon torte and scoop on the sorbet. Eat quickly in the sunshine.

The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book | 19


The

PIE MINISTER Leicestershire and Rutland has an extraordinary food heritage – and Matthew O’Callaghan has been vital to celebrating and extending it.

In the mid 1990s parts of rural Leicestershire were struggling, with BSE (“Mad Cow disease”) having knocked confidence in British produce.

Some 20 years later the area is England’s “Capital of Rural Food”, playing host to numerous prestige food festivals, fairs

and events and attracting some £70 million of food tourism every year.

What on earth changed? The man to ask is one of Leicestershire’s genuine food heroes - Matthew O’Callaghan OBE.

Newly-elected as a Melton Borough councillor, Matthew

saw an opportunity to exploit Leicestershire’s wonderful food heritage and called a meeting that would lead to the Melton Mowbray Food Partnership.

be assured of getting a good price for this premium product. “But there’s been a wider agenda too,” says Matthew. “We’ve established the Melton Food Festival, we set up one of the

first Farmer’s Markets, and we’ve kept our cattle market in the town centre and invested in it.”

The wonderfully atmospheric cattle market, which also hosts collectibles fairs and fur and feather markets is a town jewel and another important element in bringing tourism.

Matthew has also helped establish the British Pie Awards and the Artisan Cheese Fair, the largest cheese fair in the country which features some 300 cheeses. “We’ve got Stilton the king

of cheeses, but we’ve also got Red Leicester, Colwick, Slipcote

- so we should be the capital of cheese,” says Matthew. Other events to follow include PieFest and ChocFest.

He also needed a good campaign. And that came when he

There’s a great history of food in Leicestershire and Rutland

as a Melton Mowbray pie but had pink, cured meat so it was

of Rutland in the 17th century to the pioneering work of

saw a Marks and Spencer pork pie that was heavily branded

nothing of the sort! An attempted prosecution under trading

standards failed, but that just prompted the indefatigable

O’Callaghan to lead an 11 year campaign through the courts until the mighty Melton pork pie was eventually given Protected Food Name status by the European Union.

As a result not only are consumers across the world assured of a better pie, but new producers have opened up locally and can 20 | The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book

– from the first ever wedding cake recipe by the Countess Robert Bakewell in breeding cattle.

“Yes, we’ve got great heritage but we are trend setters too,” emphasises Matthew. “The range of ethnic food, especially in

Leicester is unique and we’ve got rural businesses producing paneer, Japanese tofu and halal lamb. It’s amazing what we’ve got here. ”


Matthew O’Callaghan



Walter Smith Fine Foods HOW TO SELECT AND COOK THE PERFECT STEAK To achieve the perfect steak eating experience we have to start at the most important part of the process – the steak! At Walter Smith our sirloin and rib-eye steaks are dry-aged in our specialist dryageing cabinets. Dry-ageing beef for 21-28 days will lose 30% of moisture from the muscle, this then creates a greater concentration of beef flavour and depth of taste, and ultimately this process lends to a superior tender eating steak.

Cooking the steak Remove the steak from the fridge 1-2 hours before cooking and allow to reach room temperature. We recommend a heavy duty thick based griddle pan, preferably non-stick. Place the griddle pan on a high heat. Oil the steak lightly all over. At the last moment before placing in to the pan season with salt and pepper. Place the steaks into the pan, turning each minute to ensure an even cook. Do not overload the pan, only cook two steaks at a time. With a pair of tongs hold the steak and brown the sides. We recommend the following cooking times for a 2cm thick sirloin or rib eye. Blue 1 minute each side Rare 1 minute 30 seconds each side Medium Rare 2 minutes each side Medium 2 minutes 30 seconds each side Well done 4 minutes each side Tip: Remember to rest your steak for at least five minutes. The steak will absorb the free running juices resulting in a moist and tender steak.

The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book | 23


Fifth generation

BREWERS Family-owned business that has stayed passionate about beer and about Leicestershire.

When William Everard opened his Leicester brewery in 1849 he no doubt did so with the confidence typical of his fellow Victorian entrepreneurs. But one doubts he ever imagined

that his company would become synonymous with Leicester for well over 165 years and that the fifth generation of his family would still chair the business.

So how has Everards ridden out the great tectonic shifts that have convulsed the brewing industry over the last fifty years?

Great beers are important obviously, but that’s not always

been enough for others. The strong regional identity has helped – Everard’s iconic Tiger bitter, for example, is named

in honour of the Royal Leicestershire Regiment which got the Tigers nickname from its time in India, a name which also transferred to City’s rugby team.

What has also been key is a positive, supportive approach

to pub management at a time when “pubco” has become a byword for rapaciousness. “We own all our pubs but all our

licensees get a three year landlord and tenant protected

tenancy agreement,” says Erika Hardy, Head of Marketing. “We support them in whatever they need, giving them the freedom to run the kind of pub they want to run.”

24 | The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book

For some, such as The Queen’s Head in Saddington, that means developing a high quality food offer.

Everards’ four core beers – Beacon, Tiger, Original and

Sunchaser – are supplemented by monthly special brews. “This is such an exciting time for brewing right now and

we’ve a passionate brewing team with tremendous depth of

knowledge,” says Erika. “Right now they are working on a Mad Hatter’s ale that will be flavoured with apple and rosehip tea – I know they are going to make a great tasting pint.”

The company displays a commendably collegiate approach to

their brewing and regularly host guest brewers from around the world. With their celebrated Gold Course they actually get their licensees to come in and brew themselves, the results

of which sometimes make it to the pumps. They even go into

partnerships with competitor microbreweries through Project

William, a scheme which helps small scale brewers to get

their own pubs in exchange for an Everards pump on the bar. The company has around 180 pubs in 14 counties, predominantly in the East Midlands. “Having a strong

presence locally is very important to us,” concludes Erika. “Our heart is very much in Leicestershire.”


Everards Brewery


Wine

MATCHING We asked Duncan Murray Wines to come up with a wine match for the recipes in this book so you can be sure to have the perfect accompaniment. All the wines are available at Duncan’s shop in Market Harborough. BEAUTIFUL PUBS COLLECTIVE Duck Rillettes Sauternes de Rayne Vigneau (Bordeaux, France) - £25 Hand-harvested grape by grape to pick just the best ones giving a rich yet refreshing white with sweet, baked apple, peach, apricot and notes of sultana which will pick up beautifully with the rillettes. Duck Egg Scotch Egg Famille Perrin Luberon White (Provence, S. France) - £10 Luberon is the area made famous by Peter Mayle’s stories of ex-pat life in rural southern France where the grapes Bourboulenc, Grenache Blanc, Ugni Blanc and Roussanne make a fresh yet full flavour. THE BERKELEY ARMS Braised Shoulder of Venison Appassimento Edizione Oro (Veneto, NE Italy) - £14 Made from late harvested super ripe grapes making a rich and raisiny dry red (not unlike a Valpolicella Ripasso in style) with spice, chocolate and vanilla notes on top of the heady black fruits.

26 | The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book

THE BEWICKE ARMS Herb Crusted Haunch of Venison, Pressing of Root Vegetables Medievo Gran Reserva Rioja (Rioja, N. Spain) - £20 This blend of Tempranillo, Mazuelo and Graciano grape varieties is seductively fulsome yet complex and elegant with smoky flavours of ripe red berry and cherry fruits plus sweet spice. A Rioja of this calibre will add lustre to the richness of the herb crusted haunch. BRADGATE PARK VENISON Venison Casserole Chateau du Vieux Parc Selection Rouge Corbières (Languedoc, S. France) - £14 Amazingly good value, full-flavoured red in the style of a Châteauneuf-du-Pape made by Louis Panis, one of our favourite twinkly eyed producers in the deep south of France and the wine cries out for fulsome flavoured dishes like his wife’s wild boar or this super casserole. Keeper’s Pie Du Clos Coteaux du Languedoc (S. France) - £9 A cheeky little red made by an English chum in the Languedoc, this is intense and concentrated yet fruity and elegant and brims with plummy fruits of the forest flavours.


Duncan Murray Wines

The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book | 27


A long and rich history in farming has always put Leicestershire and Rutland at the forefront of British agriculture, with produce known for its high standard across the UK and overseas. Famous culinary offerings like Stilton, Red Leicester and of course pork pies have helped to put the region on the map, but that’s not all that makes this an exciting area when it comes to the food and drink scene. From Michelin starred restaurants like Hambleton Hall and John’s House to a multitude of country pubs, cafés, delicatessens, markets and exceptional producers; the culinary community is flourishing across the two counties. Whether it’s venison from Bradgate Park, Burleighs Gin from 45 West, real ale from Everards Brewery or a pie from Melton Mowbray, there’s much to shout about here. The Leicestershire and Rutland Cook Book offers a unique insight into this thriving food scene, featuring stories and recipes from the best of the region’s independents. It’s time to roll up your sleeves and get stuck in.

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